Instagram Logo

drpatrickavery

Patrick Avery

Primal Transects
Remote expedition planning and support
Wilderness Medicine training and remote medical advice and support.

739
posts
849
followers
9.7K
following

I first started the whole Mountain Bongo camera trap project in July 2022 and I finally got a decent photo of one of the big males last week. High res photos of one of these guys in the wild like this are incredibly rare andhard to achieve and I’m chuffed to have got it. It’s been quite a journey with lots of helpful input and advice from Bongo Surveillance Project, Murray Grant, and the KWS team in the aberdares. We all share a passion for conserving and better understanding these highly endangered creatures.

There are some important things to note here:

1) All of this work has been done under direct supervision by the KWS ranger team who are very experienced with the movements and behaviour of the bongo. The KWS team are using our images to report and monitor on the bongo population.

2) You can see he is at a slight trot. He doesn’t like the noise of the shutter or the flash so when the first shot goes off he starts to move more quickly. It does disturb them slightly and this is something I am very mindful of as one does not want to overly disrupt their behaviour with one’s actions. If lots of would be camera trappers were to start putting flash cameras all over the Aberdares it definitely wouldn’t be to the bongos benefit. It’s a tricky balance as on the one hand these photos can be used to create awareness or funds for bongo conservation but one has to respect the animals themselves too. As such I am getting more and more thoughtful and careful about where, how, and if I use the bigger cameras based on these observations.

3) The trailcameras that we use more widely cause less/no disruption to their behaviour and are a much better surveillance tool. There is important work to be done to look more widely for the presence of bongo in the aberdare ecosystem as there are good looking bits of habitat that are less accessible and which are not currently being monitored due to a lack of resources. It would be heartening to know that there may be more of them than we currently think. Certainly in this part of the park there is a healthy population but it may be very localised. I simply don’t know all these answers but I’m intrigued to understand more.


364
50
2 years ago


I first started the whole Mountain Bongo camera trap project in July 2022 and I finally got a decent photo of one of the big males last week. High res photos of one of these guys in the wild like this are incredibly rare andhard to achieve and I’m chuffed to have got it. It’s been quite a journey with lots of helpful input and advice from Bongo Surveillance Project, Murray Grant, and the KWS team in the aberdares. We all share a passion for conserving and better understanding these highly endangered creatures.

There are some important things to note here:

1) All of this work has been done under direct supervision by the KWS ranger team who are very experienced with the movements and behaviour of the bongo. The KWS team are using our images to report and monitor on the bongo population.

2) You can see he is at a slight trot. He doesn’t like the noise of the shutter or the flash so when the first shot goes off he starts to move more quickly. It does disturb them slightly and this is something I am very mindful of as one does not want to overly disrupt their behaviour with one’s actions. If lots of would be camera trappers were to start putting flash cameras all over the Aberdares it definitely wouldn’t be to the bongos benefit. It’s a tricky balance as on the one hand these photos can be used to create awareness or funds for bongo conservation but one has to respect the animals themselves too. As such I am getting more and more thoughtful and careful about where, how, and if I use the bigger cameras based on these observations.

3) The trailcameras that we use more widely cause less/no disruption to their behaviour and are a much better surveillance tool. There is important work to be done to look more widely for the presence of bongo in the aberdare ecosystem as there are good looking bits of habitat that are less accessible and which are not currently being monitored due to a lack of resources. It would be heartening to know that there may be more of them than we currently think. Certainly in this part of the park there is a healthy population but it may be very localised. I simply don’t know all these answers but I’m intrigued to understand more.


364
50
2 years ago

This evening we thought it would be fun to recreate our original 1996 Rhino Charge pre-event team photo. A lot has changed over the last 26 years; the wheels are bigger and the legs are longer; the wrinkles are deeper and the hair is thinner; and the two @landrover are barely comparable. The fact that @bundufundi @kieran.avery and myself are all still competing together in this legendary event as a family is pretty darn cool #rhinocharge2022 #rhinocharge @menengaioil @forrangers @rhino.charge


308
22
3 years ago

This evening we thought it would be fun to recreate our original 1996 Rhino Charge pre-event team photo. A lot has changed over the last 26 years; the wheels are bigger and the legs are longer; the wrinkles are deeper and the hair is thinner; and the two @landrover are barely comparable. The fact that @bundufundi @kieran.avery and myself are all still competing together in this legendary event as a family is pretty darn cool #rhinocharge2022 #rhinocharge @menengaioil @forrangers @rhino.charge


308
22
3 years ago

Attenborough; 95 and still having a laugh. A couple of my photos that SDA kindly signed after a trip we did to Mana Pools in Zim. Always such a privilege. ‘To good times on safari’ @bbcearth #bbcearth #sirdavidattenborough #attenborough #95goingstrong


502
27
5 years ago

Attenborough; 95 and still having a laugh. A couple of my photos that SDA kindly signed after a trip we did to Mana Pools in Zim. Always such a privilege. ‘To good times on safari’ @bbcearth #bbcearth #sirdavidattenborough #attenborough #95goingstrong


502
27
5 years ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago


Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Happy Birthday Sir David. Celebrating your 100th birthday today and wishing you well. What a privilege it was to spend time filming with you across the globe in years past. Fantastic memories full of laughter and fascination that I will always cherish. From filming the last northern white rhinos in Kenya and painted wolves in Zim, road tripping across North and Central America, to filming in northern Finland in the depths of winter. You never really needed me there in a medical capacity but I was so lucky to get that opportunity anyway. Thank you! #davidattenborough #100th #100years #sirdavidattenborough @olpejeta


205
4
5 days ago

Look who’s lurking about…. All videos taken on the piece of land we have near the Loldaigas. This was all agricultural land but borders with a large protected area and it’s amazing to see the wildlife coming back #trailcam #trailcamera #cameratrap #bushbig #honeybadger #wildlife


149
20
4 months ago


Cillian getting a bit over confident. No injuries thankfully. #sendit #2026 #newyear


50
16
4 months ago

Leaping into 2026 like… (no children were hurt when making this video-thankfully you seem to bounce quite well when you are only 7) #2026


43
4 months ago

Sibiloi on the eastern side of Lake Turkana. A place very special to me and my family from many memorable and life shaping safaris since childhood. An extremely hot, windy, harsh desert environment that remains hard to get to on long rocky and dusty roads. A place that still feels a long long way from the modern world. Not for the faint hearted. A place that can sometimes be intimidating and even scary.

It is also a place of immense wildness and beauty. A place of endless discovery and a rich history unlike anywhere I have been. The evidence of this history is evident everywhere: etched into the ancient lake shorelines; the sedimentary deposits overflowing with fossils; petrified forests; the stone tools left here by our hominid ancestors who flourished in this area. Then there is the lake and all the life it supports influenced directly by its historical legacy of intermittent communication to the Nile drainage basin. The golden light at dawn and dusk is unlike anywhere else.

This place is not as it was when I was a child. There are species missing from the plains and the lake shores of the National Park face a commercial fishing pressure that never existed in the past. KWS are fighting this hard. These things aside it is still very special and with the high lake levels there is a profusion of life in the shallows and inundated landscape.

It is always a great adventure to visit and whilst it’s not a relaxing safari the memories and education one takes from these experiences stay with you for life. It’s a great privilege to be able to take my own kids there now and to watch siblings catching Nile perch, tiger fish, and tilapia off the shore like I did with my siblings and parents, in a place that most people will never visit. I’ve been lucky to fish for Nile perch widely in places like Cameroon and Uganda and for me there is still nowhere like Turkana in terms of the ability to cast a fly or lure in daylight from the shore to target these iconic fish. Watching the kids literally having to brace themselves against the rocks to stop the perch pulling them in was something I won’t forget. #flyfishing #catchandrealease #thetugisthedrug #keepthemwet


188
12
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago


We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

We’ve just returned from a 10 day trip to Sibiloi National Park-Andrea, myself and the kids. Turkana is the highest it has been since the early 1900s, surpassing the high levels seen in the late 70s/early 80s. The fringes of the lake have therefore inundated lots of vegetation creating an incredible environment for aquatic life and birds.

Sibiloi was as beautiful as ever with great grass cover. I was last there in Dec 2019 when there were still a good number of Burchells zebra and Tiang on the plains adjacent to Alia Bay. Very sadly in the last 6 years the zebra have gone completely extinct there (presumably the bad drought of 2021-23 in conjunction with bush meat poaching). There are a few Tiang left (KWS team there guesstimate around 25-30) but only close to the HQ at Alia Bay. They used to be found right up to Koobi Fora. The reticulated giraffe that used to be quite numerous around Koobi Fora when I was there in 2004 are completely extinct in the park. I saw very small numbers of Bright’s Gazelle again just near park HQ. Didn’t see any south of the park from Isiolo all the way via Laisamis/South Horr/Loiyangilani/Gus. No oryx at any point in the trip. Only two ostrich near Ololokwe.

The only mammals that we saw with regularity throughout the entire trip were ground squirrels, gerenuk, baboons and dik dik. There are still warthog and lesser kudu in the park near Koobi Fora. Cheetah have been seen at both Koobi Fora and Alia Bay in recent months and we saw 4 African wild cats, striped hyena, and lots of golden wolves. I saw one black backed jackal too. Spotted hyena still present too and saw signs of porcupine and aardvark. There are reports of leopard but none of lion. There are hippo present in the lake near Alia Bay and north towards Koobi fora. Didn’t see them but saw fresh tracks and poo. There are apparently at least 6-7 and potentially as many as 20 according to KWS. Lots of crocs in the lake at Alia Bay. Koobi F camp largely underwater.

Those who know Campi Turkana will be interested by 7th photo showing lake level. You can no longer drive into the campsite and the water is lapping at the foot of trees that used to be 80m from the shore.


193
9
6 months ago

Boys being boys on their @osetbikes. Awesome little electric machines. First set of home made jumps on the piece of land we have near Umande. Loldaiga hills in the background 🤘🏼.


39
7 months ago

So it turns out Chameleons are excellent swimmers.


103
4
1 years ago

Check out the insane water clarity of the Soca River in Slovenia. 25m I reckon. Amazing. #socariver #axisgo


76
4
1 years ago


비밀리에 인스타그램 스토리 보기

인스타그램 스토리 뷰어는 인스타그램 스토리, 비디오, 사진 또는 IGTV를 비밀리에 보고 저장할 수 있는 간단한 도구입니다. 이 서비스를 통해 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 언제든지 오프라인으로 즐길 수 있습니다. 인스타그램에서 나중에 확인하고 싶은 흥미로운 콘텐츠를 찾거나 익명으로 스토리를 보고 싶다면, 우리 뷰어가 적합합니다. Anonstories는 신원을 숨길 수 있는 훌륭한 솔루션을 제공합니다. 인스타그램은 2023년 8월에 스토리 기능을 출시했으며, 이 기능은 흥미롭고 시간에 민감한 형식으로 빠르게 다른 플랫폼에 채택되었습니다. 스토리는 사용자가 텍스트, 이모지 또는 필터로 보강된 사진, 비디오 또는 셀카를 공유할 수 있게 해주며, 24시간 동안만 표시됩니다. 이 제한된 시간 동안 높은 참여를 유도하며 일반 게시물보다 더 많은 반응을 얻을 수 있습니다. 오늘날 스토리는 소셜 미디어에서 연결하고 소통하는 가장 인기 있는 방법 중 하나입니다. 그러나 스토리를 볼 때, 제작자는 자신의 뷰어 목록에서 당신의 이름을 볼 수 있으며, 이는 개인 정보 보호에 대한 우려를 일으킬 수 있습니다. 만약 스토리를 아무도 모르게 탐색하고 싶다면? 그때 Anonstories가 유용해집니다. 이 도구는 신원을 드러내지 않고 공개된 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있게 해줍니다. 관심 있는 프로필의 사용자명을 입력하면 해당 프로필의 최신 스토리를 확인할 수 있습니다. Anonstories 뷰어의 특징: - 익명 브라우징: 뷰어 목록에 나타나지 않고 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. - 계정 필요 없음: 인스타그램 계정에 가입하지 않고 공개 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있습니다. - 콘텐츠 다운로드: 스토리 콘텐츠를 직접 다운로드하여 오프라인에서 사용할 수 있습니다. - 하이라이트 보기: 24시간 제한을 넘어서 인스타그램 하이라이트를 볼 수 있습니다. - 리포스트 모니터링: 개인 프로필의 스토리 리포스트나 참여도를 추적할 수 있습니다. 제한 사항: - 이 도구는 공개 계정에서만 작동하며, 개인 계정은 접근할 수 없습니다. 장점: - 개인 정보 보호 친화적: 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 보면서도 눈에 띄지 않습니다. - 간단하고 쉬움: 앱 설치나 등록이 필요 없습니다. - 독점 도구: 인스타그램에서 제공하지 않는 방식으로 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 관리할 수 있습니다.

Anonstories의 장점

인스타그램 스토리 비공개로 탐색

인스타그램 업데이트를 비밀리에 추적하고 개인 정보를 보호하며 익명으로 남을 수 있습니다.


개인 인스타그램 뷰어

개인 프로필 뷰어를 사용하여 쉽게 프로필과 사진을 익명으로 볼 수 있습니다.


무료 스토리 뷰어

이 무료 도구는 인스타그램 스토리를 익명으로 볼 수 있게 해주며, 스토리 업로더에게 활동을 숨길 수 있습니다.

자주 묻는 질문

 
익명성

Anonstories는 사용자가 인스타그램 스토리를 볼 때 제작자에게 알림을 보내지 않도록 합니다.

 
디바이스 호환성

iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, Chrome, Safari와 같은 최신 브라우저에서 원활하게 작동합니다.

 
안전성 및 개인 정보 보호

로그인 정보 없이 안전하고 익명으로 브라우징할 수 있습니다.

 
등록 필요 없음

사용자는 간단히 사용자명을 입력하여 공개된 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. 계정이 필요하지 않습니다.

 
지원 형식

사진(JPEG)과 비디오(MP4)를 쉽게 다운로드합니다.

 
비용

이 서비스는 무료로 제공됩니다.

 
비공개 계정

비공개 계정의 콘텐츠는 팔로워만 접근할 수 있습니다.

 
파일 사용

파일은 개인적 또는 교육적 용도로만 사용 가능하며 저작권 규정을 준수해야 합니다.

 
작동 방식

공개된 사용자명을 입력하여 스토리를 보거나 다운로드할 수 있습니다. 서비스는 콘텐츠를 로컬에 저장할 수 있는 직접 링크를 생성합니다.